Transcript

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Personal Branding Workshop
Creative Exchange, Derby
Wednesday 30th June 2010
1. What is personal branding?
People buy from people
Personal branding is how you can shape others perceptions of you, by using marketing and branding
techniques, to further your personal or professional goals.
“If you type an email, you’re branding yourself. If you have a conversation with a friend or family member,
you’re branding yourself. How you dress, what you eat, and how you talk all contribute to your brand. Think
of your brand as the summation of all the associations about you that are stored in people’s minds.”
- Steve Pavlina, Personal development coach www.stevepavlina.com/blog/2008/02/personal-branding/
The origins of personal branding
Branding is what distinguishes why you buy a product: you choose a wine if its label, its design, its
description and its marketing speaks to your values.
Successful British brands include: Howies (eco-friendly clothes), Innocent (pure fruit smoothies) and
Marmite. All have the same successful attributes: great content (a great product), great design and unified,
consistent marketing messages.
Personal branding was first defined in a 1997 Fast Company Magazine article “The Brand Called You” by
Tom Peters. Instead of relying on a company for career guidance, it’s up to you to become a ‘free agent’ to
take ownership of the brand called you. The new ‘killer app’ at that time - email – would only be read and
engaged with if you already had a strong, personal brand connection with that person.
Social media changes everything
Before: Jobs are for life, stay loyal to the company brand.
Now: Loyalty is to your professional journey working with organisations that can support your
aims.
Before: Only businesses and organisations are visible online, branding is a corporate issue.
Now: Social networks mean anyone who chooses to can become an online influencer. What you
say as an individual counts.
Going offline is NOT an option
Three laws of personal branding:
Authenticity: Be yourself, replicas aren’t valuable. Define your brand before someone else does for you.
Transparency: It’s better to be straightforward and honest then lie and have your actions work against you.
Visibility: If you aren’t known, you don’t exist.
Taken from “Me 2.0” Dan Shawbel www.personalbrandingbook.com
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3. The four-step personal brand planning process
1. Discovery 2. Brand
what’s your what are your
story? goals?
4.Management
Start doing (and
3. Approach
The 4 Cs of
measuring) personal marketing
1. Discovery
Find your sweet spot: The secret to a successful personal brand is knowing your strengths, who your
audience is and why they will buy from you. The digital economy benefits experts and those who can own
their niche – by carving out a deep niche you can eradicate the competition. Your niche covers:
• Skills (provide specialist technical or service skills)
• Service delivery (a unique methodology, a different way of purchasing or billing)
• Values (your style of service delivery matches the values of your customers)
To succeed in your niche you need to have:
Differentiation (standing out from crowd) with
Marketability (providing something others want and need)
“Work less, earn more, love your job”
It sounds too good to be true, but by doing what you love work will be fun, you will be more motivated so
you can earn more. Personal branding adds value to your job or enterprise and improves happiness - in and
outside work.
Focus on what you do well – be a super-hero (or heroine) within your strengths. Outsource your
weaknesses.
Use keywords to define what you do. These are words that you can use to attract the most website visitors
(Search Engine Optimisation) which also align with your brand which you can use in all your content (talks,
status updates on social networks, website, brochures).
www.googlekeywordtool.com – find out the traffic in UK and global for your keywords.
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Personal development resources:
Myers-Briggs Personality test: www.myersbriggs.org
VIA Survey of Character Strengths: www.authentichappiness.sas.upenn.edu
Belbin Team Roles: www.belbin.com
The Highlands Ability Battery: www.highlandsco.com
Personal SWOT analysis www.businessballs.com/swotanalysisfreetemplate.htm
Personal PEST analysis www.businessballs.com/pestanalysisfreetemplate.htm
“But I’m not a salesman!”
Personal branding is perfect for those who aren’t natural sales people. By planning your approach
to your brand and sticking to it you are ‘soft selling’ your brand – what you do, your values and
services – every day. Don’t cold call: let them come to you.
2. Brand planning – What are your goals?
Define your audience:
- Who is the audience for your products & services?
(location, lifestyle, demographics, buying behaviours)
- What are their values?
- Create User Personas – archetypes to describe the types of customers you have and what they
expect from your business
Know your market:
Competitors – Who are you losing work to currently? What can you learn (and steal) from them?
Comparators – Who are your peers? Who can you share with them and learn from them?
Key influencers – Who do you aspire to be? How and when could you connect with them?
(Tip: social media is a great short cut to influence your influencers)
Create your personal brand statement (external):
1) Personal positioning statement: what you’re best at who you serve
2) Personal Brand statement –your brand and your audience in one sentence
First work on your ‘log copy’ versions for your website, brochure or CV: 200 words, 100 words, 50 words, 35
words, 20 words, 3 words.
Create your personal vision statement (internal):
Where do you want to be – in 1 year? In 2 years? In 3 years? How do you want to be perceived in your
specialism? Financial goals? Personal priorities?
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3 year career chart: Your big vision in 3
years
Your major Your major
Your major
goals in 1 year goals in 1 year
goals in 1 year
Actions
Actions Actions Actions Actions this Actions Actions Actions Actions
this this this this year this this this this
year year year year year year year year
Set your goals (short, medium and long-term) as SMART (specific, measurable, achievable, realistic, and
time), for example:
“By April 2013, I want to be the leading web designer for the environmental sector in Derbyshire”
“By April 2012, I want to achieve three £5K or more web contracts in the environmental sector”
3. Approach – The 4 Cs of personal marketing
Think of your business as a market stall: to sell you need great:
Content – this is your products, and also the marketing content you use to promote your products. It could
include video, photos, your social network feeds, a blog, e-books
Community – Who gathers around your content and who you want to attract
Conversation – This is the chatter that sells your products, are they made using a special process? Do they
have an unusual history? Thinking about using key influencers to influence more of the right people.
Consistency – ensuring your design and content is consistent with your personal brand: tone, imagery and
also regularity and frequency.
4. Action plan
Look again at your goals and SMART objectives. Work out a short-term action plan (3-12 months) to
achieve them. Be realistic about how much time ongoing you can give to your plan.
4. Personal branding tools
Traditional:
Business card: add your photo & preferred method of contact
Virtual business card send by text message: www.contxts.com
PR – do newsworthy things, hire a PR expert
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Using social networks and online content to support your personal brand:
Promote expertise:
- Your blog
- Guest write for bigger blogs, industry magazines, newspaper by-lines
- LinkedIn Answers, Yahoo! Answers
Share knowledge:
- Scan horizon in your subject area (Google Alerts, Twitter Search Feeds, industry journals)
- Write and re-tweet relevant stories as status updates
Have a memorable avatar:
- A consistent image, your face smiling and looking up or a distinctive logo
- Use your avatar consistently, or a consistent style of imagery
Claim your name:
- Register a name you can ‘own’ across all networks you may potentially want to later use (see
www.namechk.com for availability)
Networks:
Audit your followers – Who are they? Where do they live? What sector do they work in? What do
they share? What percentage are friends/ associates/ strangers?
Tips for personal marketing on Twitter:
Once a day:
A tip based on your experience
Something personal
Ask a question
Re-tweet an expert
Converse with a contact
Converse with a key influencer
Once a week:
Your new or archive blog article
Promote followers (follow Friday)
Once a month:
Build or promote a list
Twitter management tools:
HootSuite – www.hootsuite.com manages all major social networks and scheduling updates
TweetDeck – www.TweetDeck.com Desktop and iPhone App to manage all major social networks
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Creative Exchange
Personal Branding Workshop
1. Personal Positioning Statement
What are you best at and who do
you serve?
2. Personal Branding Statement
Your brand and your audience in
one sentence
3. PERSONAL OBJECTIVES
Your SMART (specific, measurable, (e.g. “By April 2013, I want to be the leading web designer for the
achievable, realistic and timely) environmental sector in Derbyshire”)
objectives
(choose a good timeframe for you
between 1 – 5 years)
4. ACTION PLAN
Set realistic action for next 3 – 12 (e.g. By November 2010 to have 300 UK environmental industry followers
months noting: on Twitter)
Action
Allocated resources (time/money)
Success measure
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